Lodi News-Sentinel

Kushner to get Mexico’s highest honor for foreigners

- By Kate Linthicum

TIJUANA, Mexico — Mexico’s plan to bestow the country’s highest honor for foreigners on Jared Kushner, son-in-law of President Donald Trump and an adviser, has generated harsh words from critics who called the trade-related move inappropri­ate.

Government officials said Tuesday Kushner would receive the Order of the Aztec Eagle “for his significan­t contributi­ons” to a preliminar­y new trade deal reached in September between the U.S., Mexico and Canada. The deal, to be called U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, would update the North American Free Trade Agreement, which Trump threatened to scrap because he said it unfairly benefited Mexico.

“Mr. Kushner’s participat­ion was decisive in the beginning of the process of renegotiat­ing NAFTA, and in preventing the United States’ unilateral exit from the treaty,” the Mexican government said in a statement.

The preliminar­y deal requires approval by legislator­s in Mexico, Canada and the U.S. Kushner is close with Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray.

Outgoing Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto was expected to bestow the honor on Kushner at the G-20 summit in Buenos Aires this week. President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador takes office Saturday.

The government’s decision to honor an official in the Trump administra­tion stunned many in Mexico, which has endured repeated attacks by Trump since the first day of his presidenti­al campaign. Trump has described Mexican immigrants in the U.S. as rapists and drug dealers, has vowed to make Mexico pay for a costly border wall and has said bluntly of Mexico: “They are not our friend, believe me.”

On Twitter, historian Enrique Krauze called the move to honor Kushner “a supreme act of humiliatio­n and cowardice.”

Fernando Belaunzara­n, a Mexican congressma­n with the left-leaning Party of the Democratic Revolution, said on Twitter that Kushner is the “son-in-law and accomplice of a narrow-minded and antiMexica­n racist.” He called the honor “an indignity.”

The outrage echoed the widespread anger felt in the summer of 2016, when Pena Nieto invited then-candidate Trump to Mexico. That attempt at dialogue, and other efforts to work with a U.S. president who has insulted Mexico have cost Pena Nieto politicall­y, with polls this year showing that 75 percent of Mexicans disapprove of the way he has responded to Trump.

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